Current Awareness Journals

 The library currently subscribes to these Journals. Please contact us for articles from these publications. We can provide scans, or pdfs, under fair dealing guidelines.

 

Appeal: Review of Current Law and Law Reform (Appeal) is a double-blind, peer-reviewed law journal published through the Faculty of Law at the University of Victoria (Victoria, British Columbia, Canada).

This source contains the full texts of all articles and research papers published in the Journal since Volume 20 (1994). Each annual volume contains the proceedings of the annual Conference of the Canada-United States Law Institute (CUSLI). CUSLI was created in 1976 by the law schools of Case Western University and the University of Western Ontario. This source includes a browse feature that allows users to easily navigate through a table of contents to quickly locate specific volumes or issues. Researchers may also perform keyword searches in the full-text documents. Searches may be restricted by segments. (See segment descriptions below.) Citations link to the full text versions of decisions and articles cited in the documents. This journal can also be searched as part of the All Canadian Legal Journals and All Commentary sources. The individual articles in this journal are included in the LexisNexis Canada topical sources.

Founded in 1923, the Canadian Bar Review is the bilingual peer-reviewed legal journal of the CBA, where theory and practice meet. Its mission is to serve the legal profession, the bench, the bar, and the academy by publishing the highest quality legal scholarship that will shape discussion on the most relevant legal issues of our time

Full text of articles from Canadian Journal of Family Law. Selected coverage begins with 1991 (vol. 10).

This source contains the full text of all items published in the Dalhousie Law Journal published since Vol. 21 (Spring 1998). The Dalhousie Law Journal contains material which is dedicated to the scholarly review of legal issues and topics concerning international and comparative law.

The Estates, Trusts & Pensions Journal is a critical tool for those involved in the estates, trusts and pensions areas, such as lawyers, trustees, custodians, actuaries and accountants. It covers new trends in estates and trusts with special coverage of pensions issues.

This source contains articles, case comments and book reviews published by the students of the Faculty of Law, University of Manitoba. First published in 1884 and continuously since 1961, the Manitoba Law Journal is one of Canada's oldest and largest entirely student run legal periodicals, and currently issues three parts each year.

This McGill Journal of Law and Health publishes articles on a rolling schedule, releasing articles individually rather than waiting for the entire issue to be completed. For this reason, only one or two articles are added at a time. The McGill Journal of Law and Health, formerly the McGill Health Law Publication, is a student-run, on-line endeavor sponsored by the Faculty of Law at McGill University. The MJLH is an interdisciplinary project consisting of a peer-reviewed anthology featuring scholarly contributions by renowned academics and practitioners alongside an organic on-line database - a resource of recent developments in the field of health law. Both components aim to inform the vital public debate surrounding health, public policy and ethics and to critically explore the nexus of health and law in a transsystemic framework.

This source contains the full text of all items published in the McGill Law Journal since Volume 37, Number 2 (1992). The Journal is a bilingual publication that promotes the development of legal scholarship and aims to foster a more profound understanding of the common law and civil law legal traditions. Today the Journal is recognized as an important forum for the critical analysis, often from a comparative or transsystemic perspective, of contemporary legal issues in the realms of public and private law, as well as international law.

This source contains the full text of all items published in the Osgoode Hall Law Journal since Vol. 32(3). These items include articles, commentary, book reviews, and lectures. The Osgoode Hall Law Journal is a joint student-faculty enterprise. The Journal has earned a reputation for excellence in publishing scholarly articles on a wide range of perspectives about law and legal institutions. It aims to provide an interdisciplinary forum for innovative and provocative approaches to legal knowledge, publishing articles that present new theoretical generalizations; report empirical findings; or address the impact of legal developments on issues of social, political, or economic concern from a wide array of disciplinary and ideological perspectives. As well, the Journal receives and publishes articles by authors from around the world who offer international or comparative perspectives. This source contains articles in both English and French. Translations of abstracts are included in each document.

This source contains the full text of all items published in the Queen's Law Journal since Volume 21, No. 1 (Fall 1995). These items include articles, comments and book reviews. The Queen's Law Journal is a fully refereed scholarly publication produced by a student editorial board under the direction of a faculty advisor. The Journal has a well established international readership, and is among Canada's most highly respected law journals

This source contains the full texts of all articles published in Resources, the quarterly newsletter of the Canadian Institute of Resources Law, since Number 81 (Winter 2003). This newsletter provides commentary on matters of current concern in natural resources law and policy. It contains information on the Institute's activities including new publications, courses, seminars and conferences. Recent developments in resources case and statute law are also included. Some articles in Resources are of particular interest to people practising resources law, while many other articles concern resource or environmental policy issues. Resources is therefore of interest to anyone working in resource development or who is concerned with resource use or the environment.

This source contains the full text of all issues of The Sunday Evening Administrative Review since Issue #1 (July 18, 2021). SEAR is a weekly newsletter, designed for Canadian administrative law practitioners and students. Each issue contains 3-5 interesting or important administrative law cases from the previous week, from courts across Canada. A short doctrinal analysis providing practical insights on each case is included, highlighting interesting implications for adminsitrative law doctrine in Canada.

This source contains a selection of Supreme Court Law Review volumes, offering a thorough analysis of key decisions by the Supreme Court of Canada, while critically examining the soundness of those decisions. Some volumes were developed from Osgoode Hall Law School's annual Constitutional Cases conferences.

This source contains the full text of all items published in the University of British Columbia Law Review since Volume 26, No. 1 (1992). These items include articles and case comments. The UBC Law Review is a peer-reviewed journal published by the University of British Columbia Law Review Society.

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